Saturday Summary 2026-07-11: Books Read, Books Bought, Books Up Next

I picked this week’s graphic because it’s been hotter in England than we’re used to, upwards of thirty degrees centigrade, and it suddenly feels that cities are not places you’d visit unless you had to. It’s being reported as a heat wave, but I suspect it’s our new normal and I know we’re not set up to deal with it. 

Fortunately, I’m retired, so I can avoid the midday heat and enjoy the hot evenings. Of course, I’m still escaping into books, although it’s too warm to wear headphones for long, so I’m pulling ebooks to the top of my reading pile. 

Anyway, here’s what I read and bought in this hot week and what I’m planning to read next week.

This week, I had fun with the latest DI Adams book, yet another Elizabeth Moon Science Fiction book, and a lighthearted July 4th short story from Stephen King. Weike Wang’s short story wasn’t fun, but it did get under my skin.

This was a darker-than-average DI Adams novel. This time, she isn’t investigating a crime; she’s a victim of one. The action scenes worked well, but at times it felt like Adams was wandering fairly aimlessly through a videogame. The mystery about what was going on and the tension about what Adams could do about it (if anything) worked well for the first half of the book, but then started to wear thin. The ending was dramatic but felt a little too easy. To take this series further, I think Kim Watt is going to have to reveal what it is that makes Adams so special, and Adams is going to have to stop treating magic as an aberration and start to understand it as a threat and a tool.

I spent a pleasant hour and a bit on July 4th listening to Tim Sample narrate Stephen King’s ‘Drunken Fireworks’ (2015). It’s a well-crafted story that, as well as making me smile, provided me with a master class in how to reveal a person’s character just by sharing how they tell a story. Tim Sample’s narration added to the fun, capturing the monologue of the main character (who is a Maine Character) perfectly.

My review is HERE

Reading Weike Wang’s short story, ’Shadowing’ (2020) was hard work. It’s an anxious tale about anxious, unhappy people who are pretending to be happy and successful, exemplars of the roles they’re filling. It was unsettling to read because there was a dissonance between the storytelling style and the content of the story; a dissonance that echoed the dissonance between the polished perfection of the look-how-interesting-and-unique-I-am resumé the protagonist is dutifully polishing and her experience of the life she’s leading. It was a story that had me constantly searching for its meaning, which, again, echoed the protagonist’s mostly unspoken questioning of her own choices.

My review is HERE

So what do you do in the fourth novel of a science fiction series to keep everything fresh? Well, if you’re Elizabeth Moon, you push aside the main characters from the first three books and write an exciting and thoughtful novel focusing on a minor character who came to the rescue of Captain Serrano in the third book. 

The result was unexpected and splendid. Military SF that went well beyond an obsession with weapons, warships and space battles. It has all those things, but they take second place to the development of the main character. Great tension combined with impressively realistc enviornments, physical and social, on and off ship.


The five books I bought this week come from around the world: an American woman writing about Sorrento, an American woman writing about Croatia, an English woman writing about Kazakhstan, Hong Kong and Mars, an Australian woman writing about a woman in her eighties who is suspected of murder and an Australian Ned Kelly Lifetime Achievement Award winner kicking off his best-known police procedural series. I’m looking forward to all of them, even the one that sounds like a romance – I mean, it’s partly written from a dog’s point of view, so how romantic can it be? I’m going to Croatia in September, so I’ll be taking the corporate spy novel with me. 


I’d meant this week to be all about Science Fiction but then I stumbled across a Mystery Writers of America Presents short story collection edited by Lee Child and decided it would be perfect summer reading.

This collection has some big names in it who I’m looking forward to reading but I’m also hoping to find writers who are new to me. I’ve only the first story and I’ve alreadyI added Twist Phelan’s ‘Fake’ to my TBR pile.

The mix of space ship Sci Fi and they-want-to-eat-me horror appeals to me. I tried S. A. Barnes’ ‘Dead Silence’ a few years ago and got bogged down when the pace slowed in the middle. ‘Cold Eternity’ is shorter,and it’s her latest novel, so I’m hoping I’ll have a better time with this one. 

I’d meant to leave a week between ‘Once A Hero’, the fourth book in this series, and ‘Rules of Engagement’. Then I checked out the first chapter. Now I’m already 25% through. What can I say? Elizabeth Moon writes things that make reading fun.

One thought on “Saturday Summary 2026-07-11: Books Read, Books Bought, Books Up Next

  1. I’ve found the same problem with reading Elizabeth Moon – it makes me want to read more. I’m looking forward to getting back to her sci fi, but for now I’m loving her fantasy

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment